As previously suggested, a lot has changed at RIT in ten years. Take for example the RITskeller. The RIT student cafe/bar is now an ESPN zone. Seriously. Walk in and it looks pretty much the same. But once you finish paying for your food and turn into the dining area, one finds oneself looking into a small TV production studio with a SportsCenter backing.

The wall that separated the Ritz back of the RIT game room has been knocked out and replaced with what you see above. I had heard that this had happened but didn’t expect the results to be quite so dramatic.

Thank you to everyone for your encouragement. Long overdue e-mails will be going out soon. Oh and Zooks, it’s only an MA. Though I truely wish it was a PhD.

Well, I’ve already slipped my “I’ll post every Monday thru Thursday” promise. Given my track record this should come as no surprise.

The last three days have been spent learning how much the School of Print Media (SPM) and RIT have changed since I graduated. This will most likely go on for a while. I attended my first faculty meeting and met most of the SPM staff. One of the things to file in the “it’s a small world” category is that my former upstairs neighbor, Dr. Franziska Frey, is now on the school’s staff. Interestingly, it was another upstairs neighbor from 195 Merriman St who unknowingly set this entire process in motion. I with hence forth refer to this pattern of serendipity as the “195 Effect.”

Today’s theme will be reading and research. Yesterday I raided the RIT Library and returned with a stack of books on the 15th century European evolution of print. I’m interested in learning a bit more about Messrs. J. Gutenberg and A. Manutius (both the Greater and the Younger).

Its a new year and I officially find myself in the job that has been one of the worst kept secrets out there: namely I’m now an adjunct professor at the Rochester Insitute of Technology’s School of Print Media. Here’s a shot of me in my new office, which I am sharing the office with a Jack Karpen of the School of Photography, whom I have yet to meet..

Note the door. This is something new for a refugee from a cube farm and shared graduate spaces.

I’ll be blogging at least four days a week starting today, documenting whats going on. And there is a lot. A LOT. For the moment, here is the story of how I landed this job. I originally wrote this summary for a local networking group that I’ve been involved with. It nicely sums up the last two years and will catch everyone up on the employment story thus far:

In the fall of 2004, I took an educational leave of absence from kodak.com to pursue a graduate degree at the University of Chicago. This past summer, after completing the classwork component, I returned to Rochester. Unfortunately, with education leaves there is never a guarantee of employment and I learned that there was no longer a position available for me at Kodak. So I began networking, including joining PeerNet, while I worked on researching and writing my thesis.

As part of that networking, I wanted to get in touch with people who were engaged in similar research on social networks. I posted a note about it on my blog and a friend sent me an e-mail suggesting that I contact the Lab for Social Computing at RIT. Researching the Lab, I realized that I had met one of its members a number of years ago through a common friend. So I dropped Tim an e-mail. He in turn suggested that I contact another member of the Lab. Amit was interested in talking with me and he suggested meeting at RIT before a lecture he was planning to attend. When I got to RIT I found out that a former professor of mine, Frank Cost, was giving the lecture. After discussing our research Amit and I both attended the lecture. That gave me a chance to say hi to Frank at the meet-and-greet that followed the talk. Frank, in turn, was excited to hear about my time at the University and suggested that we might grab lunch.

To cut to the chase, that lunch has led to a six month teaching appointment with the School of Print Media and the possibility of a tenure track position.

I’m back from Chicago and all graduated and stuff. Drea and I fly back to Rochester earlier today. Unfortunately, my cell phone apparently decided that it wanted to see the world and stayed on the plane we took from Chicago to Dulles (the hub that Independence Air uses). So I am, once again, temporarily without phone. This time, if the phone does not surface within the next 24 hours, I will be buying a new one.

More on Graduation to follow tomorrow.

Ok… things went really well. I’m just waiting on a final call to make sure things are set before letting it out of the bag.